Notable: First Georgia player since Dominque Wilkins in 1981 to be named SEC Player of the Year and first-team All-SEC by coaches and The Associated Press; one of nine Division I players to score in double figures in all of his team's games last season; among SEC leaders in nine of 13 categories.

Strengths: Outstanding shooter with good range and quick
release; good passer; good defender; good rebounder; jumps well.

• "Caldwell-Pope wasn't the most consistent perimeter
shooter -- he shot just 43 percent from the floor this season -- but he also
was the only game in town most nights for the Bulldogs. When he was on, he
could score in bunches, as when he scored 24 on 12 shots in a win over
Tennessee. He didn't shoot it as well against Kentucky a month later, but he
got to the foul line 11 times and added 10 rebounds in the Bulldogs' upset. 'I
thought he was, he had the talent, you check off that box for sure,' said a
college assistant coach whose team played Georgia this season. 'He had that in
spades. And then I thought he had kind of a mature-type deference to his game
that great players have. They'll play. They'll do what their coach asks. When a
coach asks you to play, I always thought there was kind of a wink to your best
players ... like, OK, you take over when it's time. But I thought he was really
compliant with what [Georgia coach Mark] Fox asked him to do, but he was ready
to take over when needed.' Scouts believe Caldwell-Pope has to get stronger.
But he can get by people on the dribble." – David Aldridge, NBA.com

• "Caldwell-Pope's biggest weapon when
he looked to score was his pull-up jump shot. With nearly three-quarters of his
shot attempts coming from the perimeter in the half court, roughly half of
which were off the bounce, he scored a second ranked 1.118 points per-shot as a
pull-up jump shooter, an impressive mark relative to his average 1.066 points
per-shot in catch and shoot situations. If Caldwell-Pope has a weakness on paper, it is his average finishing
ability relative to his peer group. A 55.6% shooter in transition and 53.7%
shooter at the rim in half court situations, he hovers right around the mean in
both categories. Turning the ball over on a sample second ranked 10.6% of his
possessions, Caldwell-Pope's low turnover rate certainly helped compensate for
his issues around the rim last season." – DraftExpress.com